Title of article :
Quality of Life, Psychological State, and Cognitive Emotion Regulation Strategies in Allergic Rhinitis Patients vs Healthy Population: A Comparative Study
Author/Authors :
Shirkhani, Milad Department of Psychology - Faculty of Education and Psychology - Ferdowsi University of Mashhad - Mashhad, Iran , Aali, Shahrbanoo Department of Psychology - Faculty of Education and Psychology - Ferdowsi University of Mashhad - Mashhad, Iran , Khoshkhui, Maryam Department of Immunology - School of Medicine - Allergy Research Center - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences - Mashhad, Iran , Rafizadeh-Ardabili, Golnaz Department of Psychology - Faculty of Education and Psychology - Ferdowsi University of Mashhad - Mashhad, Iran
Abstract :
Objective: Allergic rhinitis, as a global health problem, accounts for several psychological
disorders, including fatigue, mood changes, depression, anxiety, and disrupted Quality of
Life. How people cope with the symptoms of this disease is essential. The present research
is pioneering in comparing the QoL, psychological state, and cognitive emotion regulation
strategies of patients with allergic rhinitis and healthy individuals.
Methods: Aligned with the purpose of the study, 132 patients and 132 healthy subjects were
assigned to two groups. Both groups responded to the QoL symptom checklist (SCL90) and a
short form of the Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (CERQ). One-way multivariate
analysis of variance (MANOVA) was run to make between-group comparisons.
Results: The findings revealed that allergic patients had a lower QoL. Similarly, the two
groups showed statistically significant differences in physical health, environmental life, and
overall QoL. Clinical symptoms prevailed more in the allergic group compared to the healthy.
Also, these two groups differed significantly regarding somatization, interpersonal sensitivity,
and anxiety sub-scales. The healthy group used more adaptive cognitive emotion regulation
strategies (for instance, acceptance and positive reevaluation) than the allergic group. In
addition, statistically significant divergences were found in the catastrophizing strategy, which
prevailed more in the allergic group.
Conclusion: Given the present findings, patients with allergic rhinitis have lower psychological
health and QoL compared to the healthy population. These unfavorable conditions can result
from inefficient use of cognitive emotion regulation strategies that mutually link allergic and
clinical symptoms to the patients’ QoL.
Keywords :
Allergic rhinitis , Quality of Life , Psychological state , Cognitive Emotion Regulation strategies
Journal title :
Practice in Clinical Psychology